English

On a Tree and a Path with no Geometric Simultaneous Embedding

Computational Geometry 2010-01-05 v1

Abstract

Two graphs G1=(V,E1)G_1=(V,E_1) and G2=(V,E2)G_2=(V,E_2) admit a geometric simultaneous embedding if there exists a set of points P and a bijection M: P -> V that induce planar straight-line embeddings both for G1G_1 and for G2G_2. While it is known that two caterpillars always admit a geometric simultaneous embedding and that two trees not always admit one, the question about a tree and a path is still open and is often regarded as the most prominent open problem in this area. We answer this question in the negative by providing a counterexample. Additionally, since the counterexample uses disjoint edge sets for the two graphs, we also negatively answer another open question, that is, whether it is possible to simultaneously embed two edge-disjoint trees. As a final result, we study the same problem when some constraints on the tree are imposed. Namely, we show that a tree of depth 2 and a path always admit a geometric simultaneous embedding. In fact, such a strong constraint is not so far from closing the gap with the instances not admitting any solution, as the tree used in our counterexample has depth 4.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1001.0555,
  title  = {On a Tree and a Path with no Geometric Simultaneous Embedding},
  author = {Patrizio Angelini and Markus Geyer and Michael Kaufmann and Daniel Neuwirth},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1001.0555},
  year   = {2010}
}

Comments

42 pages, 33 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T14:30:46.825Z